CP is shaping up well.
Good news about the Tekhand rehabilitations
nice snaps onlyprince!

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CP has around 12 blocks and work in the others will start soon.
NEW DELHI: It's a sneak peak into what Connaught Place would have looked like when it was built in the 1930s. With CP's C-block renovation work almost complete, you just have to look at the block next to it to actually understand how one of the most important commercial hubs in the city was envisaged and what it's condition actually is.

The block, which house 39 shops, has been under renovation for a year now and is the pilot project undertaken as part of CP's redevelopment plan. The New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC) has tried to restore the facade of the building as per the original design (made by Robert Tor Russel and W H Nicholls) after extensive research through the civic agency's archives, alongwith that of CPWD. The restoration work has cost NDMC Rs 2 crore. According to the civic agency, work began with C-block as it is the smallest block in CP.

Says Anand Tiwari, spokesperson of NDMC: "We have used granite stone for the flooring and have carried out plastering and finishing of the outer facade. You will see no wires hanging out as ducting in front and two sides of the block has been carried out. The windows have been restored to their original shape and wrought iron railings have been put up. Uniform signposts have also been put up." They still have to fix the lighting in the area.

CP has around 12 blocks and work in the other blocks will start simultaneously once restoration of the facade of C-block is complete.

Meanwhile, NDMC is still making a plan for the parking in CP. While some areas will have surface parking, underground parking will also be made where ever it is a viable option. The plan to begin restoration was mooted in 2004 and expected to be complete by July 2010. CP will also have central air-conditioning, according to officials.

While many traders are happy with the 'new look' of C-block, it hasn't gone down well with some of them. Says Vaishalik, partner, Jain Book Agency: "The extended footpaths have eaten into out parking space and some of our telephone lines have not been functional for days." Due to the tenant-landlord problems, the facade of all blocks in
CP were in a very bad condition.

Says Sadan Singh, who has been working in CP for 30 years: "I have been working in CP for years and felt sad that an area so important in terms of heritage was rotting away due to fights between tenants and landlords. The restoration of CP is important to give generations to come a glimpse of the past."

Designed by Robert Tor Russell and W H Nicholls, CP was built in 1931 and is named after the Duke of Connaught, a member of the British royal family, who visited India in 1920. Designed in a circular form, it is divided into blocks by seven radial clocks. The radius of the inner circle is about 947 ft. Though CP appears circular, close observations reveals that it is more like a horseshoe in design.